Pronouns refer to a person, object, or attribute without naming them. Therefore, unlike other words (full-valued), they do not have their own content, but change it depending on the situation, the situation and the one who uses them to express. With the help of negative particles, pronouns become negative ( nobody, nothing).

Pronouns are personal ( me, we etc., of which the gender differs only in the 3rd person - he she it); possessive ( mine, ours, yours, yours etc.); index ( this that etc.); interrogative ( who, what, whose, which, etc..); relative - these are the same interrogative ones in form, but they are not used to indicate a question ( who's come?), and for the connection between parts of a complex sentence ( someone who wants to see you has come). There are definitive pronouns ( himself, everyone, everyone), as well as return ( myself). All these features are characteristic of both Russian and Greek.

When declining personal pronouns in Russian, their forms are formed from different stems ( I - me, we - us, you - you - you, you - you). Such a phenomenon is called suppletivism. For Greek personal pronouns, it is also characteristic as a sign of archaic forms in declension.

Personal pronoun - I -ἐgώ

Personal pronoun - You

The Greek article originated from a demonstrative pronoun.

The feminine article

masculine article

The neuter article

From the article in the role of a demonstrative pronoun, with the addition of the particle de, a pronoun was formed, meaning this one, this one, this one.

Pronoun this-ὅde

Pronoun this-ἥde

Pronoun it is-tόde

Relative pronoun which also coincides with the article in its endings.

Pronoun which

Pronoun which

Pronoun which